Apple co-founder Steve Jobs died on Wednesday October 5,
2011, but he left behind a legacy full of iconic products. We've rounded up
some of the most significant ones for Heylos followers.
Steve jobs was an American entrepreneur, marketer and
inventor who was the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple Inc.
Steve Jobs was out to change the world. He said so on
more than one occasion, and yelled it on others. He irrevocably altered the worlds
of computers, communication, cinema and creative arts: His products sent
tremors through the markets they entered and created new landscapes for others to
build upon. These products represent Steve Jobs' most iconic creations
--perfect blends of groundbreaking tech, sleek design, keen marketing, and most
importantly, Steve himself.
Apple II (1977)
The Apple II was Apple’s first major success. It was the
first computer to come in a plastic case, which helped the personal computer progress
from hobbyist obsession to consumer product. The computer brought IT power into
small and medium businesses, and its success drove Jobs’ belief that design
could help bridge the gap between computers and ordinary people.
Macintosh (1984)
"The computer for the rest of us" introduced
the mouse and graphical user interfaces to a mainstream audience; two
revolutionary innovations that contributed to make a computer so simple, so
intuitive, that a child could understand it. The Macintosh created a consumer expectation
that computers could be sleek, simple and user-friendly.
Pixar (1986)
Jobs left Apple in 1985, and the year following, bought a
small animation studio from Lucasfilm for $5 million. In 1995, following the release
of Toy Story, he finally saw the fruits of Pixar's labors. For the next decade
and a half, the studio produced blockbuster after blockbuster, changing the
landscape of the entertainment business.
On January 24, 2006, Jobs and Iger announced that Disney had agreed to purchase
Pixar in an all-stock transaction worth $7.4 billion.; to date, the studio has
taken home 10 Oscars and been nominated for 30 more.
Mac OS X (2001)
The tenth edition of Apple's core operating system didn't
start its life at Apple. Its origins lie in work that Jobs and his team did on NeXTSTEP,
an operating system built at NeXT, the company he founded after leaving Apple
in 1985. Apple bought NeXT in 1997; soon after Jobs resumed his CEO duties, and
the OS was adopted for future release. OS X has proven so successful and
versatile that it was adapted as iOS for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.
iTunes (2001) /
iTunes Store (2001)
The iTunes media player software allowed users to
organize their digital music collection; paired with the iTunes Store, it
revolutionized the music business and changed the way we consume our media.
After a court-ordered injunction brought down the music-sharing service Napster,
industry insiders were still trying to figure out how to retrain consumers to
pay for music: Jobs’ answer was ease of use and
convenience. iTunes now sells millions of tracks a day,
yielding billions in revenue.
iPod (2001)
The iPod didn't just change how we store our music: It
changed how we listen to it. No longer limited to a CD at a time, users could
listen to single after single, making the track significantly more important
than the album it was released on. With its signature click wheel, the iPod
became an icon of Apple’s unmatched capacity for simplicity in design and
insight into pure usability.
iPhone (2007)
The iPhone struck the telecommunications world like a
lightning bolt, and changed mobile computing profoundly. It wasn't the first
phone with a touch screen, but it was the first that felt intuitive and fun.
For the first time a phone boasted software and hardware that were perfectly in
sync.
iOS App Store
(2008)
The App Store took a revolutionary product --the iPhone--
and took it to another level, where suddenly the user experience could change near-instantly.
Need a piece of software to finish a job, or a game to entertain you for a few
minutes? The App store put a world of software at your fingertips. It also
created a massive infrastructure for independent developers, allowing them to
easily distribute their work and make money from every sale. As of January
2011, more than 10 billion apps had been downloaded from the store.
iPad (2010)
Critics laughed when the name of Apple’s tablet was
released, but nobody’s laughing now. The iPad made mobile computing easy,
accessible and fun --and brought publishers of print media clamoring to make
tablet editions. It wasn’t the first tablet on the scene, but it was the first
without a stylus or a keyboard: By the end of 2010 it had 75 percent of the
tablet computer market share.
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